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Ben Gibson

Lecturer in Applied Psychology, De Montfort University
I am an early career academic with a background in health and positive psychology. I have expertise in long-term physical health conditions, well-being, inequalities, lived experiences, and intervention evaluations. I seek to do work that supports and partners with those who wish to flourish and find success in all its forms, regardless of one’s health status, education, or background.

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Ben Goldsmith

Ben Goldsmith is Senior Lecturer in Screen and Media, and program convenor of the Bachelor of Creative Industries at the University of the Sunshine Coast.

His recent research focuses on media policy and the Convergence Review, and he wrote three submissions to the Review on behalf of the ARC Centre of Excellence for Creative Industries and Innovation. His research interests include Australian cinema and television, media production and globalisation, and media and cultural policy. He has previously worked at Queensland University of Technology, the University of Queensland, the Australian Film, Television and Radio School, and Griffith University. He has written several books including Rating the Audience (with Mark Balnaves and Tom O'Regan) The Film Studio (with Tom O’Regan), and Local Hollywood (with Susan Ward and Tom O’Regan). He is the co-editor (with Mark Ryan and Geoff Lealand) of the Intellect Directory of Australian and New Zealand Cinema, volume 2, published in 2015.

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Ben Goulet-Scott

Higher Education & Laboratory Coordinator at Harvard Forest, Harvard University
I am a curious naturalist based in Boston, trained as a plant biologist and artist, and passionate about conservation and education.
I completed my PhD in evolutionary biology at Harvard University, and I am now Higher Education & Laboratory Coordinator at Harvard Forest.

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Ben Handel

Ben Handel is an economist at the Unversity of Claifornia at Berkeley whose research focuses on health care markets. His research has studied consumer decision-making and market design of health insurance markets, and illustrates the interplay between consumer decision-making and market regulation. Ben has also researched provider financial incentives and take up of preventive care in health care markets.

Ben received his Ph.D. in economics from Northwestern in 2010 and an A.B. in Economics from Princeton in 2004. In addition to his teaching at Berkeley, he has advised numerous businesses and policymakers on a range of issues related to health economics.

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Ben Hayes

Director, Centre for Animal Science, The University of Queensland
Professor Hayes has extensive research experience in genetic improvement of livestock, crop, pasture and aquaculture species, with a focus on integration of genomic information into breeding programs, including leading many large scale projects which have successfully implemented genomic technologies in livestock and cropping industries. Author of more than 300 journal papers, including in Nature Genetics, Nature Reviews Genetics, and Science, contributing to statistical methodology for genomic, microbiome and metagenomic profile predictions, quantitative genetics including knowledge of genetic mechanisms underlying complex traits, and development of bioinformatics pipelines for sequence analysis. Clarivate Highly cited researcher.

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Ben Heard

Ben Heard is a doctoral student at the University of Adelaide, examining pathways for the decarbonisation of Australian electricity with the inclusion of nuclear energy.

As director of (currently in hiatus) ThinkClimate Consulting he delivered modelling of carbon neutral pathways for South Australia's largest local government and recently advised the South Australian Freight Council in a detailed report called Green Freight.

Ben’s appreciation of the climate crisis forced a rethink of his long-held opposition to nuclear power. In early 2011 he delivered his seminal presentation Nuclear Power: From Opponent to Proponent to a strong response. Ben has since become one of Australia’s most prominent nuclear advocates, presenting his work to audiences large and small around Australia including the 2011 Local Government Association State Conference, the 2012 Frontiers in Science conference and a landmark televised nuclear debate victory in 2012. Ben has written on nuclear power extensively in print and on-line media, including a recent popular article for ABC Environment, Renewable vs nuclear is the wrong battle. His advocacy website, Decarbonise SA, has become a popular resource, attracting over 100,000 hits.

In 2012 he launched his independently funded research Zero Carbon Options, with a first-of-a-kind direct comparison of nuclear and renewable options for the replacement of coal-fired electricity in Australia. In July 2013 he was a presenter and panellist for the ATSE conference "Nuclear power for Australia?"

Ben lives in Adelaide with wife Gemma Munro and their two children.

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Ben Jervis

Professor of Medieval Archaeology, University of Leicester
I am professor of medieval archaeology, specialising in the archaeology of medieval Britain and the analysis of ceramics. My research seeks to use material culture to understand how people coped with and experienced change, and how the roots of contemporary society are planted in the medieval period. For example, my research into diet examines how communities adapted to social and political change in the early medieval period and my analysis of medieval rural material culture considers how the development of commercial attitudes can be seen in the archaeological record. My work also applies archaeological theory (particularly ‘non-representational’ theories such as Assemblage Theory and Actor-Network Theory) to important archaeological questions. I also examine the relationship between historical text and the archaeological record.

I am currently PI of the UKRI funded research project ENDURE: Urban Life in a Time of Crisis, which examines lived experiences of the 14th century crises among the populations of small towns in medieval England.

Honours and awards

PI: UKRI funded project: ENDURE: Urban Life in a Time of Crisis
Co-Investigator, Leverhulme Trust funded project Living Standards and Material Culture in English Rural Households 1300-1600
Recipient of grant from the Royal Archaeological Insitute Tony Clark Fund (2016)
Recipient of research grant from Society of Antiquaries (2016)
Recipient of research grant from Society for Medieval Archaeology (2016)
Recipient of grant from Society for Medieval Archaeology Eric Fletcher Fund (2009)
AHRC Doctoral Award (2008)
AHRC MA studentship (2006)

Previous academic positions

2014 -2023: Lecturer/Senior Lecturer/Reader in Archaeology, Cardiff University
2012-13: Lecturer in Medieval History & Archaeology, Birkbeck
2012: Research Associate, Faculty of History, University of Cambridge
2010: Research Assistant, Institute of Archaeology, UCL.
2006: Graduate Attachment, British Institute in East Africa, Nairobi.
Speaking engagements

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Ben Jones

Senior Lecturer, University of East Anglia
PhD London School of Economics
MA Johns Hopkins University
BA Cambridge University

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Ben Kolosz

Lecturer (Assistant Professor) of Renewable Energy and Carbon Removal, University of Hull
Ben is a Lecturer (Assistant Professor) in renewable energy and carbon removal at the Energy and Environment Institute, University of Hull (UK).

He holds a PhD in Civil and Environmental Engineering from the University of Leeds and has held prestigious research appointments in the United Kingdom and the United States. He is a former member of the Kleinman Center for Energy Policy, University of Pennsylvania (U.S.).

His work seeks to understand the dynamics and quantification of environmental emissions and energy needs of technological systems. His research also aims to anticipate the impact of new technologies and their infrastructure, and to develop practical modelling strategies for avoiding negative impacts, as well as the societal consequences of using such technologies on local and global communities. Research interests include geospatial integration strategies for carbon dioxide removal technologies coupled with renewable energy, sustainable fuels as well as low carbon mine remediation using waste carbon and geothermal energy supply from mine wastewater. His methods to accomplish this work include but are not limited to Life Cycle Analysis (LCA), Techno-Economic Analysis (TEA) and Artificial Intelligence (AI).

Research interests:

Renewable Energy

Carbon Dioxide Removal

Life Cycle Analysis

Data Science

Sustainable Transport

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Ben Kravitz

Assistant Professor of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences, Indiana University
I run climate models on global and regional scales. My main area of research is climate engineering, or deliberate modification of the climate system to offset global warming. I have completed postdoctoral research associate positions at the Carnegie Institution for Science and Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL). I was then a staff scientist at PNNL for 3 years before accepting a faculty position at Indiana University, starting 2019.

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Ben Marshall

Professor Ben Marshall holds the MSA Charitable Trust Chair in Finance at Massey University, New Zealand. Among other topics, his research interests include: return predictability including the rigorous testing of trading strategies, mechanisms for minimising transaction costs in order placement, ETFs, hedging commodity risk, and liquidity issues. Ben has consulted to a range of organisations, ranging from large multinationals and hedge funds to SMEs, and not for profit organisations.His research has been discussed in numerous newspapers and investment blogs and he is a member of the Australian New Zealand Shadow Finance Regulatory Committee.

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Ben Powis

Senior Lecturer in Sport, Bournemouth University
Ben Powis, PhD, is a Senior Lecturer in Sport at Bournemouth University. His research interests include the sociology of disability sport, the embodied experiences of visually impaired people in sport and physical activity, and investigating the significance of sporting sensorial experiences.

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Ben Rider-Stokes

Post Doctoral Researcher in Achondrite Meteorites, The Open University
I am currently a Postdoctoral Research Associate in the School of Physical Sciences at The Open University. My research focuses on understanding the formation and evolution of the planets, asteroids, and moons in the Solar System. I am specifically addressing the timing of impact mixing, magmatic differentiation, and volatile accretion of achondrites, meteorites that have come from asteroids that experienced thermal processes less than 20 million years after Solar System formation.

In the longer term, I hope to pursue an academic career that combines original research into planetary systems (principally using material science techniques) with teaching and mentoring of future planetary scientists.

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Ben Thomson

Masters of Public Health student, Bloomberg School of Public Health, Johns Hopkins University
Dr. Ben Thomson (MD MSc MPH(c) FRCPC) is a nephrology and internal medicine physician practicing in the Toronto area. He commonly travels outside Canada to do humanitarian work, including to Gaza and Uganda. He runs a charity to enhance medical education in low and middle income countries, and is completing MPH at Johns Hopkins school of public health, specializing in Humanitarian Health

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Ben Albert Steward

Australian National University

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Ben Lee Taylor

Postdoctoral Fellow in Research on Teaching and Learning, McMaster University
My doctoral research and dissertation examined early 20th century satiric art and literature. However, my experiences teaching during and after the COVID-19 pandemic led me to my current position as a postdoctoral fellow researching the impact of artificial intelligence on higher education. In this position at McMaster, I have designed and am conducting a study on the design of assessments for students in a pedagogical environment that is being increasingly disrupted by the availability and use of tools like ChatGPT. The mixed methods study will run through spring of 2024 and includes several components that aim to help instructors address AI in their courses and classrooms.

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Ben M Clift

Professor of Political Economy, University of Warwick
Ben recently won a highly prestigious Leverhulme Major Research Fellowship for a project entitled, ‘The Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR) and the Politics of UK Growth amidst Brexit, Uncertainty and Austerity’. This will run from October 1st 2018 to September 30th 2021. Ben's wider research interests lie in comparative and international political economy, and he has published widely on the IMF, French and comparative capitalisms, the politics of economic ideas, capital mobility and economic policy autonomy, the political economy of social democracy, and French and British politics in journals including The British Journal of Political Science, Journal of Common Market Studies, The Journal of European Public Policy, The Review of International Political Economy, New Political Economy, Party Politics, and Political Studies.

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Ben Thomas Gleeson

Doctoral Candidate, Australian National University
Doctoral candidate in Human Ecology at the Fenner School of Environment and Society, ANU. Previous research in Biological Anthropology and Ecological Agriculture.

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Benedetta Rossi

Professor of History, UCL
Benedetta Rossi works on twentieth and nineteenth century African history with a focus on slavery and other forms of unfreedom, abolition and abolitionism, labour, migration, planned development, and gender. She is currently working on a book project entitled Slavery and Abolition in Twentieth Century Africa, as well as on a number of collaborative writing and editorial projects on the global history of abolitionism. Between October 2020 and September 2025, she holds an Advanced Grant of the European Research Council on African Abolitionism: The Rise and Transformations of Anti-Slavery in Africa (AFRAB, grant no. 885418).

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Benedict Burbridge

Head of Art History at University of Sussex, University of Sussex
Professor Ben Burbridge is a writer, curator, academic and Head of Art History at University of Sussex. Recent books include Photography Reframed (with Annebella Pollen, 2018) and Photography After Capitalism (2020). Curatorial projects include the 2012 Brighton Photo Biennial, Agents of Change: Photography and the Politics of Space (various venues, 2012) and Revelations: Experiments in Photography (Science Museum, London, 2015). A former Editor of Photoworks magazine, he has written about contemporary art and photography for numerous publications including Photography and Culture, FOAM, and The Guardian, He is currently working on a book about British art, cultural memory and the UK rave scene.

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Bénédicte L. Tremblay

Nutritionniste et stagiaire postdoctorale, Université du Québec à Chicoutimi (UQAC)
Je suis diététistes-nutritionniste, membre de l'Ordre des diététistes-nutritionniste du Québec. J'ai réalisé une maîtrise et un doctorat en nutrition à l'Université Laval avec une spécialisation en nutrigénomique et génomique nutritionnelle. Je suis actuellement stagiaire postdoctorale à l'Université du Québec à Chicoutimi en sciences fondamentales avec un projet sur la génomique des allergies alimentaires et de l'asthme.

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Benjamin Bolden

Associate Professor; UNESCO Chair in Arts and Learning, Queen's University, Ontario
Dr. Benjamin Bolden, music educator and composer, is an associate professor and UNESCO Chair of Arts and Learning in the Faculty of Education at Queen’s University, Canada. His research interests include arts education, music education, the learning and teaching of composing, creativity, arts-based research, assessment in the arts, teacher education, teacher knowledge, and teachers’ professional learning. His research has been published in journals including Review of Education, Teaching and Teacher Education, Music Education Research, and Music Educators Journal. He serves on the editorial boards of The International Journal of Research in Aesthetic, Arts, and Cultural Education; The Canadian Music Educator; and The Canadian Music Teacher. As a teacher, Ben has worked with pre-school, elementary, secondary, and university students in Canada, England, and Taiwan. Ben is an associate composer of the Canadian Music Centre and his compositions have been performed by a variety of professional and amateur performing ensembles across Canada and internationally.

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Benjamin Bouchard

Étudiant-chercheur au doctorat en génie des eaux, Université Laval
Je suis étudiant-chercheur au doctorat en génie des eaux à l'Université Laval. Je m'intéresse à la neige comme ressource en eau dans les milieux naturels. Plus spécifiquement, mon sujet de recherche porte sur les intéractions physiques entre la forêt boréale et le manteau neigeux pour mieux comprendre l'évolution de celui-ci pendant l'hiver. Je cherche aussi à comprendre comment ces interactions et le régime hydrologique des bassins versants forestiers seront modifiées par des hivers plus chauds où le manteau neigeux sera plus mince.

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Benjamin Case

Postdoctoral research scholar at the Center for Work and Democracy, Arizona State University
Benjamin Case is a political sociologist specializing in social movements, democracy, and political violence. He is a Postdoctoral Research Scholar at Arizona State University's Center for Work and Democracy and he has more than two decades experience in political, labor, and community organizing.

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Benjamin Cowie

Director, WHO Collaborating Centre for Viral Hepatitis, The Peter Doherty Institute for Infection and Immunity

Director, WHO Collaborating Centre for Viral Hepatitis, The Doherty Institute

Epidemiologist, Victorian Infectious Diseases Reference Laboratory, The Doherty Institute

Infectious Diseases Physician, Victorian Infectious Diseases Service, Royal Melbourne Hospital

Associate Professor, Department of Medicine, University of Melbourne

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Benjamin Dean

Benjamin Dean is a Fellow for Internet Governance and Cyber-security at Columbia University's School of International and Public Affairs in New York City. In this role, he works at the intersection of technology and public policy.

Benjamin has lived and worked in seven countries over the past decade: his native Australia, China, India, Bhutan, France, the USA and Venezuela. He spent three years working as a research assistant in the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development's (OECD) Center for Entrepreneurship, Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs) and Local Development. In this role, he worked on a variety of projects including entrepreneurship and innovation policy reviews of Thailand and Mexico, the SME Financing Scoreboard and intellectual property rights management by SMEs.

For the past few years, Benjamin has concentrated on digital and information policy as well as working in New York's start-up scene. He is presently interested in developing alternatives to the advertising business model, which has led to the wide-spread surveillance and control of information on the internet.

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Benjamin Dowling

Lecturer of Cybersecurity, University of Sheffield
Benjamin Dowling is a lecturer of cybersecurity in the security of advanced systems group at the University of Sheffield. His research is concerned with provable security and applied cryptography, and he has works published in top cryptography and cybersecurity venues.

His work assesses the security of real-world cryptographic protocols and standards, including secure messaging protocols used by millions today. His work also proposes modifications to such protocols to improve their security, and introduces new cryptographic protocols that improve upon the state of the art, to create and influence future standards.

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Benjamin Gearey

Lecturer in Environmental Archaeology, University College Cork
Benjamin Gearey is lecturer in environmental archaeology, University College Cork, with a wide range of research interests focused on wetland and especially peatland environments. He is PI for the ongoing IRC COALESCE funded project IPeAAT, and was CO-I for the recently completed EU Joint Planning Initiative/Cultural Heritage funded project ‘WetFutures’ and other IRC funded projects.

He is a member of the United Nations Global Peatlands Initiative and an elected member of the JPICH Scientific Advisory Committee with expertise in past climate change. He is editor of The Journal of Wetland Archaeology and has published extensively on aspects of peatland heritage, environmental change and human impact, in peer reviewed journals and books, including the recently published 'An Introduction to Peatland Archaeology and Palaeoenvironments' (Oxbow Books, 2023).

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Benjamin Goldstein

Assistant Professor of Sustainable Systems, University of Michigan
Benjamin Goldstein, Ph.D, is Assistant Professor of Environment and Sustainability and head of the Sustainable Urban-Rural Futures (SURF) lab. The SURF Lab (www.surf-lab.ca) studies and emphasizes urban sustainability at multiple scales. Through his work at the SURF Lab, Benjamin helps understand how urban processes and urban form drive the consumption of materials and energy in cities and produce environmental change inside and outside cities. He develops methods and tools to quantify the scale of these changes and the locations where they occur using life cycle assessment, input-output analysis, geospatial data, and approaches from data science. Benjamin is particularly interested in combining quantitative methods with theory rooted in social science to explore multiple dimensions of sustainability and address issues of distributive justice. His topical foci include urban food systems (esp. urban agriculture), agri-commodities, residual resource engineering, global supply chains, sustainable production and consumption, and energy systems.

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Benjamin Koger

Assistant Professor, School of Computing and Department of Zoology and Physiology, University of Wyoming
Ben Koger trained as an electrical engineer and a biologist. His work focuses on using imaging and computer vision to record and study the natural world.

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Benjamin Kuipers

Professor of Computer Science and Engineering, University of Michigan

Benjamin Kuipers joined the University of Michigan in January 2009 as Professor of Computer Science and Engineering. Prior to that, he held an endowed Professorship in Computer Sciences at the University of Texas at Austin. He received his B.A. from Swarthmore College, and his Ph.D. from MIT.

He investigates the representation of commonsense and expert knowledge, with particular emphasis on the effective use of incomplete knowledge. His research accomplishments include developing the TOUR model of spatial knowledge in the cognitive map, the QSIM algorithm for qualitative simulation, the Algernon system for knowledge representation, and the Spatial Semantic Hierarchy model of knowledge for robot exploration and mapping. He has served as Department Chair at UT Austin, and is a Fellow of AAAI, IEEE, and AAAS.

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Benjamin Leruth

I am a Research Associate at the University of Kent, working as part of the NORFACE research project entitled 'Welfare State Futures: Our Children’s Europe' (WelfSOC). My research interests include Euroscepticism, differentiated integration in the European Union and comparative party politics in Europe.

I hold a PhD in Politics from the University of Edinburgh, a LL.M. in European Law from the University of Kent and a BA in Political Science from the University of Namur (Belgium). Prior to joining Kent, I worked as a Teaching Fellow in Politics at the University of Bath, and as a guest researcher at the ARENA Centre for European Studies (University of Oslo). I tweet @BenLeruth.

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Benjamin Miller

Lecturer in English and Writing, University of Sydney
Benjamin's teaching and research draws connections between rhetorical theory, Australian literary studies, theatre history and Indigenous studies. Benjamin's expertise teaching first-year writing and senior-level rhetorical theory units is built upon research into Aboriginal writing, early Australian theatre, hip-hop, and political oratory.

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Benjamin Park

Associate Professor of History, Sam Houston State University
Benjamin E. Park is an associate professor of history at Sam Houston State University and the author of Kingdom of Nauvoo: The Rise and Fall of a Religious Empire on the American Frontier. His next book, American Zion: A New History of Mormonism, will appear in January 2024.

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Benjamin Perrin

Professor of Law, University of British Columbia
Benjamin Perrin is a professor at the University of British Columbia, Peter A. Allard School of Law. He served in the Prime Minister’s Office as in-house legal counsel and lead criminal justice and public safety advisor, and was also a law clerk at the Supreme Court of Canada. Professor Perrin is a national best-selling author. His books include "Indictment: The Criminal Justice System on Trial" (University of Toronto Press, 2023); "Overdose: Heartbreak and Hope in Canada’s Opioid Crisis" (Penguin Random House, 2022); and "Victim Law: The Law of Victims of Crime in Canada" (Thomson Reuters, 2017). He has testified as an expert witness before legislative committees and regularly provides commentary in the media. He lives in Vancouver, BC. www.benjaminperrin.ca

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